Choledocholithiasis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prospective Randomized Trial Comparing EUS Guided ERCP Without Fluoroscopy With Standard ERCP in Common Bile Duct Stone Removal
For endoscopist, ERCP for bile duct stone removal is the most widely performed procedure. However, the risk associated radiation exposure to patients and staff are not neglible. Earlier studies, ERCP without the use of fluoroscopy has been reported high success for bile duct stone removal in pregnant patients to prevent radiation exposure to the fetus. EUS is highy accurate technique in detecting common bile duct stone and guiding for therapeutic intervention. There has been a few data from literature showed that EUS guided CBD stone ( CBDS ) removal are equivalent to those following ERCP in term of successful CBDS removal and complications. This randomized trial is designed to address the question that EUS guided CBDS removal is equivalent to ERCP in term of efficacy and safety.
Common bile duct stones (CBDS) can be complicated with various conditions including biliary
pain, acute cholangitis, acute pancreatitis and secondary biliary cirrhosis. CBDS should
therefore be removed even if patients are asymptomatic.
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is the cornerstone treatment of CBDS.
ERCP is often performed under fluoroscopic guidance. This comprises biliary cannulation
whereby the bile duct is achieved with a standard ERCP catheter under fluoroscopy guidance,
radiocontrast was injected for confirmation and images of biliary system, location and
number of CBDS, biliary sphincterotomy was then performed followed by stone extraction using
a standard accessories such as a basket and or balloon. Therefore, the endoscopist,
endoscopic staff and patient are potentially exposed to ionizing radiation during ERCP.
Endoscopists should always attempt to minimize radiation exposure to the personnel staffs
and patients by following the ALARA principle ("As Low As Reasonably Achievable"). ERCP
without the use of fluoroscopy is the one method to avoid exposure to radiation. A few
retrospective case series have been shown that ERCP can be performed with high success rate
without the need for fluoroscopic imaging.
EUS has been proven to have diagnostic accuracy comparable to ERCP in the diagnosis of CBDS,
and it's associated with a very low procedure related complications and non-radiation
exposure procedure. With EUS performed before ERCP, unnecessary ERCP and its related
complications can be avoided in patients without CBDS. In patients with CBDS, the images of
pancreaticobiliary tract derived from EUS provide an information regarding the location,
size and number of CBDS for guiding therapeutic endoscopy, and allowing a therapeutic ERCP
in the same session of sedation. Vohra et al. reported the retrospective case series of EUS
- based ERCP in 10 pregnant patients, they have shown that EUS performed prior ERCP can
eliminate unnecessary ERCP and achieve in CBDS clearance without the use of fluoroscopy. We
have previously reported the use of EUS guided ERCP in the removal of CBDS without
fluoroscopy (EGWF) in the pilot study, it showed that EGWF was feasible in selected patients
with CBDS. The efficacy of EUS guided ERCP in CBDS removal without fluoroscopy compared with
standard ERCP has not been fully assessed. We therefore prospectively investigated the
efficacy and safety of EGWF versus ERCP in CBDS removal in a larger patient cohort.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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